A reconstruction of extratropical Indo-Pacific sea-level pressure patterns during the Medieval Climate Anomaly

Subtropical and extratropical proxy records of wind field, sea level pressure (SLP), temperature and hydrological anomalies from South Africa, Australia/New Zealand, Patagonian South America and Antarctica were used to reconstruct the Indo-Pacific extratropical southern hemisphere sea-level pressure...

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Main Authors: Goodwin, Ian D, Browning, Stuart, Lorrey, Andrew, Mayewski, Paul A, Phipps, Steven J, Bertler, Nancy A. N, Edwards, Ross P, Cohen, Tim J, Van Ommen, Tas D, Curran, Mark, Barr, Cameron, Stager, J. Curt
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Research Online 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ro.uow.edu.au/smhpapers/1689
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivwollongong:oai:ro.uow.edu.au:smhpapers-2707 2023-05-15T13:53:47+02:00 A reconstruction of extratropical Indo-Pacific sea-level pressure patterns during the Medieval Climate Anomaly Goodwin, Ian D Browning, Stuart Lorrey, Andrew Mayewski, Paul A Phipps, Steven J Bertler, Nancy A. N Edwards, Ross P Cohen, Tim J Van Ommen, Tas D Curran, Mark Barr, Cameron Stager, J. Curt 2014-01-01T08:00:00Z https://ro.uow.edu.au/smhpapers/1689 unknown Research Online https://ro.uow.edu.au/smhpapers/1689 Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health - Papers: part A Medicine and Health Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences article 2014 ftunivwollongong 2020-02-25T11:00:02Z Subtropical and extratropical proxy records of wind field, sea level pressure (SLP), temperature and hydrological anomalies from South Africa, Australia/New Zealand, Patagonian South America and Antarctica were used to reconstruct the Indo-Pacific extratropical southern hemisphere sea-level pressure anomaly (SLPa) fields for the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA ~700–1350 CE) and transition to the Little Ice Age (LIA 1350–1450 CE). The multivariate array of proxy data were simultaneously evaluated against global climate model output in order to identify climate state analogues that are most consistent with the majority of proxy data. The mean SLP and SLP anomaly patterns derived from these analogues illustrate the evolution of low frequency changes in the extratropics. The Indo-Pacific extratropical mean climate state was dominated by a strong tropical interaction with Antarctica emanating from: (1) the eastern Indian and south-west Pacific regions prior to 1100 CE, then, (2) the eastern Pacific evolving to the central Pacific La Niña-like pattern interacting with a +ve SAM to 1300 CE. A relatively abrupt shift to –ve SAM and the central Pacific El Niño-like pattern occurred at ~1300. A poleward (equatorward) shift in the subtropical ridge occurred during the MCA (MCA–LIA transition). The Hadley Cell expansion in the Australian and Southwest Pacific, region together with the poleward shift of the zonal westerlies is contemporaneous with previously reported Hadley Cell expansion in the North Pacific and Atlantic regions, and suggests that bipolar climate symmetry was a feature of the MCA. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica University of Wollongong, Australia: Research Online Indian New Zealand Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection University of Wollongong, Australia: Research Online
op_collection_id ftunivwollongong
language unknown
topic Medicine and Health Sciences
Social and Behavioral Sciences
spellingShingle Medicine and Health Sciences
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Goodwin, Ian D
Browning, Stuart
Lorrey, Andrew
Mayewski, Paul A
Phipps, Steven J
Bertler, Nancy A. N
Edwards, Ross P
Cohen, Tim J
Van Ommen, Tas D
Curran, Mark
Barr, Cameron
Stager, J. Curt
A reconstruction of extratropical Indo-Pacific sea-level pressure patterns during the Medieval Climate Anomaly
topic_facet Medicine and Health Sciences
Social and Behavioral Sciences
description Subtropical and extratropical proxy records of wind field, sea level pressure (SLP), temperature and hydrological anomalies from South Africa, Australia/New Zealand, Patagonian South America and Antarctica were used to reconstruct the Indo-Pacific extratropical southern hemisphere sea-level pressure anomaly (SLPa) fields for the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA ~700–1350 CE) and transition to the Little Ice Age (LIA 1350–1450 CE). The multivariate array of proxy data were simultaneously evaluated against global climate model output in order to identify climate state analogues that are most consistent with the majority of proxy data. The mean SLP and SLP anomaly patterns derived from these analogues illustrate the evolution of low frequency changes in the extratropics. The Indo-Pacific extratropical mean climate state was dominated by a strong tropical interaction with Antarctica emanating from: (1) the eastern Indian and south-west Pacific regions prior to 1100 CE, then, (2) the eastern Pacific evolving to the central Pacific La Niña-like pattern interacting with a +ve SAM to 1300 CE. A relatively abrupt shift to –ve SAM and the central Pacific El Niño-like pattern occurred at ~1300. A poleward (equatorward) shift in the subtropical ridge occurred during the MCA (MCA–LIA transition). The Hadley Cell expansion in the Australian and Southwest Pacific, region together with the poleward shift of the zonal westerlies is contemporaneous with previously reported Hadley Cell expansion in the North Pacific and Atlantic regions, and suggests that bipolar climate symmetry was a feature of the MCA.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Goodwin, Ian D
Browning, Stuart
Lorrey, Andrew
Mayewski, Paul A
Phipps, Steven J
Bertler, Nancy A. N
Edwards, Ross P
Cohen, Tim J
Van Ommen, Tas D
Curran, Mark
Barr, Cameron
Stager, J. Curt
author_facet Goodwin, Ian D
Browning, Stuart
Lorrey, Andrew
Mayewski, Paul A
Phipps, Steven J
Bertler, Nancy A. N
Edwards, Ross P
Cohen, Tim J
Van Ommen, Tas D
Curran, Mark
Barr, Cameron
Stager, J. Curt
author_sort Goodwin, Ian D
title A reconstruction of extratropical Indo-Pacific sea-level pressure patterns during the Medieval Climate Anomaly
title_short A reconstruction of extratropical Indo-Pacific sea-level pressure patterns during the Medieval Climate Anomaly
title_full A reconstruction of extratropical Indo-Pacific sea-level pressure patterns during the Medieval Climate Anomaly
title_fullStr A reconstruction of extratropical Indo-Pacific sea-level pressure patterns during the Medieval Climate Anomaly
title_full_unstemmed A reconstruction of extratropical Indo-Pacific sea-level pressure patterns during the Medieval Climate Anomaly
title_sort reconstruction of extratropical indo-pacific sea-level pressure patterns during the medieval climate anomaly
publisher Research Online
publishDate 2014
url https://ro.uow.edu.au/smhpapers/1689
geographic Indian
New Zealand
Pacific
geographic_facet Indian
New Zealand
Pacific
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_source Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health - Papers: part A
op_relation https://ro.uow.edu.au/smhpapers/1689
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